Morel was born in
Buenos Aires. His father taught him the rudiments of classical guitar from age seven. He went on to study advanced guitar at the internationally renowned academy of Pablo Escobar in Buenos Aires, and after graduating, joined Escobar in radio and concert performances. Jorge Morel died in
Orlando,
Florida,
United States of America. Morel left Argentina to perform in Ecuador, Colombia and Cuba, where he recorded his first solo LP and was featured in a weekly TV show.
Vladimir Bobri, then President of the Classical Guitar Society in New York, lent his recognition and support to Morel after hearing him perform in Puerto Rico. This led to concert engagements in California and Hawaii and Morel's eventual debut at
Carnegie Hall in 1961. At this time, he recorded his second LP for Decca Records and subsequently recorded three more albums. Morel appeared at Lincoln Center's
Alice Tully Hall in New York,
Queen Elizabeth Hall and
Wigmore Hall in London,
National Concert Hall in Dublin, and
Suntory Hall in Tokyo. Over the years he performed in many countries including Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Puerto Rico, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Scotland, Spain, Sweden, Finland, Greece, Singapore, Germany and more. After moving to
New York City, Morel performed nightly at the jazz venue
The Village Gate, owned by
Art D'Lugoff, who became his manager for a period of three years. During his performances at the Village Gate, he shared the bill with jazz legends such as
Erroll Garner,
Stan Kenton,
Herbie Mann and others. Around this time, Morel met
Chet Atkins and established what was to become a lifelong friendship. Chet demonstrated his admiration for Morel in a very tangible way when he helped to arrange for the recording of another album with RCA Victor. Morel was represented by Columbia Artists Management for a total of seven years throughout the 1970s and toured all of North America and Canada performing approximately 70 concerts a year. The last ten years of his life he lived in Orlando. Morel continued to solidify his reputation as a performing artist and composer with the premiere of
Suite del Sur (a concerto for guitar and orchestra), which he performed as soloist with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic under the direction of
Zubin Mehta. He continued his study of composition for a number of years with teacher, author, conductor and arranger
Rudy Schramm. ==Legacy==